Categories
Philosophy

impermanence

There are evenings where the sky itself appears aware of some immense and unspoken sadness, as though the atmosphere has briefly become conscious of time and cannot quite contain the weight of it. Not despair exactly. Not tragedy in the theatrical sense. Something older, quieter, and more pervasive than that. A diffuse melancholy without stable […]

Categories
cybernetics

Malakacene: The Rise of Weaponised Incompetence

Malakacene: the long historical moment in which technologically mediated societies stopped selecting primarily for competence, wisdom, restraint, and institutional responsibility, and instead became increasingly vulnerable to the rapid propagation of spectacle, grievance, aggression, narcissism, and performative certainty masquerading as leadership.

Categories
Philosophy

Populist Paranoia and the Crystalline Plasticity of Political Communication

Technologically mediated democracies are invoking remedial, simplified political coherence faster than they are generating the intelligence and/or aptitude required to govern the accelerating complexity of contemporary socioeconomic experience.

Categories
Philosophy

Ebola

Ebola reminds us that civilisation may not fail through drama, but through delay, distraction, and a pathogen moving faster than our institutional cadence and cultural expectations.

Categories
cybernetics

The Architecture of Absence

A strong current in modern thought still treats things as if they exist first, complete in themselves, and only later enter into relation with other things. The individual. The institution. The nation-state. The market. The technological platform. These are often imagined as discrete objects possessing internal coherence, as though persistence were generated primarily from within […]

Categories
cybernetics

Barry, from Parramatta

A technologically-mediated civilisation has built planetary systems of prediction and control around biological reflexes still calibrated for tribe, threat, status, and symbolic belonging.

Categories
Philosophy

Milburn Pennybags and the persistence of billionaires

There is, at present, a strange cultural requirement to pretend that billionaires are evidence of societal success rather than evidence of systemic imbalance.

Categories
history

Peace, please…

For years, he sold himself as the man who could end wars through instinct, pressure, spectacle, and personal dominance alone, yet the deeper problem now emerging in the Middle East is not merely strategic failure but the exposure of an intellectual and moral vacuum at the centre of that performance. Peace is not a television […]

Categories
politics

Epstein

Jeffrey Epstein became more than a criminal case. He became a symbol of a deeper public suspicion: that extreme wealth, celebrity, political access, legal asymmetry, and institutional influence often converge into protected networks insulated from the consequences faced by ordinary people. Sealed documents, negotiated immunity deals, damaged evidence chains, elite associations, private islands, missing transparency, […]

Categories
cybernetics

The first rule of communication systems theory fight club…

It took me a long time and much exasperation to recognise and acknowledge that the first rule of communication systems theory club is: do not tell people about the theory. Not because the theory is secret. Because the theory is ineffective as information. People are not waiting for a better model of the system that […]

Categories
Philosophy

Loneliness: The Cost of Connection

In post-industrial Western societies, relationships increasingly pass through technological and transactional systems before they pass directly between people. Friendship, intimacy, courtship, status, belonging: much of social life now moves through screens, platforms, metrics, services, and algorithmic surfaces. Distance has collapsed. Presence has become persistent. The modern person can remain linked to hundreds, even thousands, of […]

Categories
Philosophy

Zero Trust: USA

The deeper damage is not simply geopolitical. It is symbolic. Empires survive contradictions all the time; people expect power to be compromised. What becomes dangerous is when the symbolic frame fractures. America spent generations exporting not merely military power or economic leverage, but a narrative about procedural stability, institutional continuity, constitutional restraint, and a vaguely […]